Thursday, October 2, 2025

Readers from different belief systems

 

As regular readers will know, I'm a retired pastor and committed Christian.  (Some would say I should be committed, but what to, they don't specify.)  I know we have various denominations and sects of Christianity, Islam and Judaism among our readers, as well as Hindus, Jains, Shintoists, atheists and agnostics.  That's fine with me.  I strive to get along with everyone.  I don't have the right to preach at them, just as they don't have the right to preach at me.  Provided we all offer each other respect, I see no reason why we can't get along in mutual respect.

Problems arise when some incident or report causes someone's religious convictions to ratchet upward, and they begin trying to convert others.  I'm sure they feel that what they're doing is what God would want them to do, but it's also something that will annoy others of different faiths, and might lead to serious outbreaks of division, dissent and annoyance.  Two commenters today apparently took my previous post on economic issues as a clarion call to "get right with Jesus" in preparation for whatever's coming.  As a Christian, I certainly don't disagree with them.  However, I'm quite sure many other readers don't share their opinion, and will not respond well to an impassioned appeal to "turn or burn".  I've therefore not published either comment, so as to avoid that kind of conflict.

Friends, when you post on this blog, please remember to treat others with the respect you expect to receive here.  If you don't want your faith disparaged, please don't disparage others' faith.  If you have your own predictions about what the future may hold, please don't try to force them down others' throats.  If times get tougher, don't spread gloom-and-doom about "if you don't get right with God, you're going to burn too!"

As for the "rapture" or "second coming" or "end times", none of us know when they're likely to occur.  Why not wait to find out, rather than contradict the Bible - and Jesus himself - through uninformed speculation?

Sorry if this has wasted your time, but it's been frustrating having to deal with this.  Let's do better.

Peter


"A timebomb waiting to go off"

 

That's how British economist Jeremy Warner describes the US stock market at present.


According to the UBS Investment Returns Yearbook, US equities today account for more than 60pc of the value of global equities as a whole, up from around 40pc 15 years ago.

Yet in nominal terms, US GDP is just 26pc of the global total, and even less at around 15pc in purchasing parity terms.

The mismatch between equity valuations on the one hand and actual economic heft on the other could scarcely be more striking. It also looks increasingly hard to justify.

. . .

Yet impressive though this phenomenon may be, it is also indicative of something much more worrying: a giant, all-consuming investment bubble at the heart of the global economy.

Almost everyone wants a part of Silicon Valley’s investment boom. In hoovering up an ever-greater proportion of the world’s supply of available capital, it threatens a frenzied and devastating end to America’s 15-year-long bull market.

. . .

If everybody else is getting rich from America’s stock market boom, the temptation to join in becomes almost irresistible.

I’ve been following stock markets for longer than I care to remember, and though we can all claim to have had the occasional success in spotting the turning points, the big lesson is that prediction is a mug’s game. Hardly anyone manages it consistently.

Here goes, anyway. The telltale signs of euphoria and over-exuberance – and therefore of capital misallocation bound eventually to culminate in loss – are today everywhere to be seen.


There's more at the link.

The inexplicable thing, to me at any rate, is that there are so many hair-trigger moments baked into our current economic cake that any one of them could bring down the entire house of cards, virtually overnight.  Think about it:

  • Russia launches massive retaliation (economic and possibly military) against NATO states which are supporting Ukraine?
  • China invades Taiwan?
  • President Trump activates the US armed forces to tackle the drug cartels in Mexico, Venezuela and elsewhere?
  • A new Middle East war severs oil supply routes from the Persian Gulf to the Indo-Pacific region and China?
  • The Internet is shut down due to many incidents of sabotage, all of which may be suspected as coming from Russia, but which can't be proved as such in the initial stages?
All these things have already happened, or precursors to them have happened, on a smaller scale.  They could ramp up overnight, leading to major disruptions in geopolitics and world economics . . . yet we're all behaving as if they aren't factors of importance at all.

Add to them major internal political disruptions in all the major nations involved (USA, Britain, France, Germany, and so on) where there is no national unity whatsoever on how to deal with the problems facing each country, or all of them together.  Some are calling for "Governments of National Unity", but when there is no national unity, that's a wee bit tricky to achieve.

And through all this, business and commerce carry on blithely earning and spending money as if there's no tomorrow, no interruption possible.  We're living in a house of cards, and utterly ignoring that reality all around us.

Therefore, dear readers, I can only suggest that we focus on the absolute basic needs of our lives and cover as many of those bases as we possibly can.

  • Build and maintain a reserve of food and emergency supplies (toilet paper, light bulbs, candles, fuel, essential medications, etc.) to last as long as possible.  My gut feel is that a minimum emergency stash should be able to take care of one's household for thirty days, and three months is even better.  I'm not sure whether six months to a year is as important, because if the crisis (whatever it may be) goes on that long, others will come to our door intent on stealing what we've got, bringing with them a whole new set of problems.
  • Know how to defend your home, your loved ones, and your emergency supplies, and have an adequate supply of the tools and equipment needed to do so, and don't hesitate to do so if this becomes necessary.
  • Build up a local network of friends and associates who can help each other make it through hard times.  I've been forcibly reminded of this during my current post-surgery recovery period.  Right now my physical condition will almost completely preclude me from defending or working for my family and loved ones.  Do I have other friends I can rely upon to "step into the gap" and do it for me until I'm on my feet again?  I'd better have!

Get as many as possible of these building blocks in place before worrying about what the stock market is doing.  Only when you've achieved that should you worry about things you can't control.

Just my $0.02 worth . . .

Peter


Wednesday, October 1, 2025

Plodding along

 

Recovery continues, slowly but surely.  My wife is being a tower of support, despite the burden that I must represent to her right now:  she has to put aside or delay many of her normal activities in order to care for my wounds, help me move around when my body locks up on me, and generally soothe my fevered brow and make me feel better.  The fact that she does so uncomplainingly is miraculous, in my book.  Yet again, I'm deeply grateful that the good Lord brought us together, and that she said "Yes" when I popped the question.  I'm sure there have been times when she's wondered about that, in retrospect!

I'm definitely noticing a slowdown in my recovery from this surgery.  Previously, I'd have expected to bounce back from it fairly quickly, so that within 2-3 days the pain had largely worn off and it was simply a matter of waiting for the stitches to come out.  Now... not so much.  Five and a half days after the staples were inserted, they hurt more than they did that first day, probably because there are so many of them. We're using an antiseptic on them, to prevent any outbreaks of infection, but there doesn't seem to be any - just a big red ridge of skin and muscle beneath them that'll have to wait until next week for release from the pressure.  Taken with the chest scar from my quadruple bypass surgery some years ago, and I'm going to be zippered pretty much from my collar-bone to my navel.  Add in a few scars from previous injuries and surgeries, and my torso is going to be like a road map.  I may have to leave it to science as a training device for future physicians - although they may not find everything inside that's supposed to be there.

Anyway, so far, so good.  More later.

Peter